11 results on '"SHANKMAN S"'
Search Results
2. God, ethics, and the novel: Dostoevsky and Vasily Grossman
- Author
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Shankman, S.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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3. The utility of an RDoC motor domain to understand psychomotor symptoms in depression
- Author
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Walther, Sebastian, Bernard, J A, Mittal, V A, and Shankman, S A
- Subjects
610 Medicine & health - Abstract
Despite the clinical impact of motor symptoms such as agitation or retardation on the course of depression, these symptoms are poorly understood. Novel developments in the field of instrumentation and mobile devices allow for dimensional and continuous recording of motor behavior in various settings, particularly outside the laboratory. Likewise, the use of novel assessments enables to combine multimodal neuroimaging with behavioral measures in order to investigate the neural correlates of motor dysfunction in depression. The research domain criteria (RDoC) framework will soon include a motor domain that will provide a framework for studying motor dysfunction in mood disorders. In addition, new studies within this framework will allow investigators to study motor symptoms across different stages of depression as well as other psychiatric diagnoses. Finally, the introduction of the RDoC motor domain will help test how motor symptoms integrate with the original five RDoC domains (negative valence, positive valence, cognitive, social processes, and arousal/regulation).
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Reactivity to uncertain threat as a familial vulnerability factor for alcohol use disorder
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Gorka, S. M., primary, Hee, D., additional, Lieberman, L., additional, Mittal, V. A., additional, Phan, K. L., additional, and Shankman, S. A., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Considering sex differences clarifies the effects of depression on facial emotion processing during fMRI.
- Author
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Jenkins, L M, Kendall, A D, Kassel, M T, Patrón, V G, Gowins, J R, Dion, C, Shankman, S A, Weisenbach, S L, Maki, P, and Langenecker, S A
- Subjects
- *
BASAL ganglia , *MENTAL depression , *EMOTIONS , *FACE , *FACIAL expression , *FRONTAL lobe , *HUMAN reproduction , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Background: Sex differences in emotion processing may play a role in women's increased risk for Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). However, studies of sex differences in brain mechanisms involved in emotion processing in MDD (or interactions of sex and diagnosis) are sparse.Methods: We conducted an event-related fMRI study examining the interactive and distinct effects of sex and MDD on neural activity during a facial emotion perception task. To minimize effects of current affective state and cumulative disease burden, we studied participants with remitted MDD (rMDD) who were early in the course of the illness. In total, 88 individuals aged 18-23 participated, including 48 with rMDD (32 female) and 40 healthy controls (HC; 25 female).Results: fMRI revealed an interaction between sex and diagnosis for sad and neutral facial expressions in the superior frontal gyrus and left middle temporal gyrus. Results also revealed an interaction of sex with diagnosis in the amygdala.Limitations: Data was from two sites, which might increase variability, but it also increases power to examine sex by diagnosis interactions.Conclusions: This study demonstrates the importance of taking sex differences into account when examining potential trait (or scar) mechanisms that could be useful in identifying individuals at-risk for MDD as well as for evaluating potential therapeutic innovations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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6. The influence of neuropeptide Y (NPY) on the relationship between emotion regulation and mood-related pathology in survivors of childhood interpersonal trauma.
- Author
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Stevens SK, Boley R, Pollack M, Hobfoll S, Shankman S, Pinkerton L, Valdespino-Hayden Z, Glover AC, Kaufman M, Dowd S, and Zalta AK
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic psychology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic blood, Survivors psychology, Affect physiology, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Interpersonal Relations, Adverse Childhood Experiences psychology, Mood Disorders psychology, Mood Disorders blood, Neuropeptide Y blood, Emotional Regulation physiology
- Abstract
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is a 36-amino acid peptide that is widely expressed throughout the limbic system. Recent evidence has highlighted NPY as a marker of resilience to posttraumatic psychopathology, which may be due to its association with neural regions involved with emotion regulation. This study examined whether plasma NPY levels moderated the relationship between emotion regulation and psychopathology in a sample of adult survivors of childhood interpersonal trauma, a population known to be at high risk for psychopathology. Adults exposed to an interpersonal criterion A trauma during childhood (N = 54) were recruited from an urban population at a midwestern medical center and completed a baseline study visit as part of a larger clinical trial. Participants gave a blood sample in order to assess circulating levels of NPY and answered questions related to emotion regulation and mood-related pathology. Results of a moderated multiple regression showed that the overall model was significant R
2 = 0.26, F (5, 48) = 3.46, p < .01. Difficulties in emotion regulation was significantly predictive of psychopathology (unstandardized B = 0.032, p < .01), and this relationship was significantly moderated by levels of NPY (unstandardized B = -0.001, p < .05) such that the relationship between emotion regulation and psychopathology was weaker for those with higher levels of NPY. Results suggest that higher levels of NPY may lessen the association between emotion regulation and posttraumatic psychopathology in survivors of childhood interpersonal trauma. Further investigation of the contribution of NPY to psychopathology in this population is warranted. NCT: 02279290., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The conflicts of interest are noted on the title page of the manuscript for your review. In particular, coauthor Sheila Dowd, PhD is a consultant for WebMD/The Wellness Network. All other coauthors (Sarah K. Stevens, M.A., Randy Boley, B.A., Mark Pollack, M.D., Stevan Hobfall, PhD., Stewart Shankman, PhD., Linzy Pinkerton, Zerbrina Valdespino-Hayden, PhD, Angela C. Glover, Michelle Kaufman, PhD, and Alyson K. Zalta, PhD) have no conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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7. Extubated, Rehabilitation-Focused Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation for Pediatric Coronavirus Disease 2019: A Case Series.
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Kilgallon KB, Leroue M, Shankman S, Shea T, Buckvold S, Mitchell M, Morgan G, Zablah J, and Maddux AB
- Abstract
During the coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, children suffered severe lung injury resulting in acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring support with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). In this case series, we described our center's experience employing a rehabilitation-focused ECMO strategy including extubation during ECMO support in four pediatric patients with acute COVID-19 pneumonia hospitalized from September 2021 to January 2022. All four patients tolerated extubation within 30 days of ECMO initiation and achieved mobility while on ECMO support. Duration of ECMO support was 35-152 days and hospital lengths of stay were 52-167 days. Three of four patients survived. Two of three survivors had normal functional status at discharge except for ongoing respiratory support. The third survivor had significant motor deficits due to critical illness polyneuropathy and was supported with daytime oxygen and nocturnal noninvasive support. Overall, these patients demonstrated good outcomes and tolerance of a rehabilitation-focused ECMO strategy., Competing Interests: Disclosure: The authors have no conflicts of interest to report., (Copyright © ASAIO 2024.)
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- 2024
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8. Physical and Mental Health in Adolescence: Novel Insights from a transdiagnostic examination of FitBit data in the ABCD Study.
- Author
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Damme K, Vargas T, Walther S, Shankman S, and Mittal V
- Abstract
Adolescence is among the most vulnerable period for the emergence of serious mental illnesses. Addressing this vulnerability has generated interest in identifying markers of risk for symptoms and opportunities for early intervention. Physical fitness has been linked to psychopathology and may be a useful risk marker and target for early intervention. New wearable technology has made assessing fitness behavior more practical while avoiding recall and self-report bias. Still, questions remain regarding the clinical utility of physical fitness metrics for mental health, both transdiagnostically and along specific symptom dimensions. The current study includes 5007 adolescents (ages 10 to 13) who participated in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study and additional sub-study that collected fitness data from wearable technology and clinical symptom measures. Physical fitness metrics included resting heart rate (RHR- an index of cardiovascular health), time spent sedentary (associated with increased inflammation and cardiovascular disease), and time spent in moderate physical activity (associated with increased neurogenesis, neuroplasticity, and healthy neurodevelopment). Self-report clinical symptoms included measures of internalizing symptoms, externalizing symptoms, and psychosis-like experiences - PLE). Increased RHR- lower cardiovascular fitness- related only to greater internalizing symptoms (t = 3.63). More sedentary behavior related to elevated PLE severity (t = 5.49). More moderate activity related to lower PLE (t=-2.69) and internalizing (t=-6.29) symptom severity. Wearable technology fitness metrics linked physical health to specific mental health dimensions, which emphasizes the utility of detailed digital health data as a marker for risk and the need for precision in targeting physical health behaviors to benefit symptoms of psychopathology., Competing Interests: Conflict Statement. We have no conflicts to disclose.
- Published
- 2023
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9. Putamen Structure and Function in Familial Risk for Depression: A Multimodal Imaging Study.
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Talati A, van Dijk MT, Pan L, Hao X, Wang Z, Gameroff M, Dong Z, Kayser J, Shankman S, Wickramaratne PJ, Posner J, and Weissman MM
- Subjects
- Humans, Creatine, Depression, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Prospective Studies, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Multimodal Imaging, Putamen diagnostic imaging, Putamen pathology, Depressive Disorder, Major
- Abstract
Background: The putamen has been implicated in depressive disorders, but how its structure and function increase depression risk is not clearly understood. Here, we examined how putamen volume, neuronal density, and mood-modulated functional activity relate to family history and prospective course of depression., Methods: The study includes 115 second- and third-generation offspring at high or low risk for depression based on the presence or absence of major depressive disorder in the first generation. Offspring were followed longitudinally using semistructured clinical interviews blinded to their familial risk; putamen structure, neuronal integrity, and functional activation were indexed by structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (N-acetylaspartate/creatine ratio), and functional MRI activity modulated by valence and arousal components of a mood induction task, respectively., Results: After adjusting for covariates, the high-risk individuals had lower putamen volume (standardized betas, β-
left = -0.17, β-right = -0.15, ps = .002), N-acetylaspartate/creatine ratio (β-left = -0.40, β-right = -0.37, ps < .0001), and activation modulated by valence (β-left = -0.22, β-right = -0.27, ps < .05) than low-risk individuals. Volume differences were greater at younger ages, and N-acetylaspartate/creatine ratio differences were greater at older ages. Lower putamen volume also predicted major depressive disorder episodes up to 8 years after the scan (β-left = -0.72, p = .013; β-right = -0.83, p = .037). Magnetic resonance spectroscopy and task functional MRI measures were modestly correlated (0.27 ≤ r ≤ 0.33)., Conclusions: Findings demonstrate abnormalities in putamen structure and function in individuals at high risk for major depressive disorder. Future studies should focus on this region as a potential biomarker for depressive illness, noting meanwhile that differences attributable to family history may peak at different ages based on which MRI modality is being used to assay them., (Copyright © 2022 Society of Biological Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The utility of an RDoC motor domain to understand psychomotor symptoms in depression.
- Author
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Walther S, Bernard JA, Mittal VA, and Shankman SA
- Subjects
- Depressive Disorder diagnosis, Humans, Hypokinesia diagnosis, National Institute of Mental Health (U.S.), Psychomotor Agitation diagnosis, United States, Depressive Disorder complications, Hypokinesia etiology, Nerve Net physiopathology, Psychomotor Agitation etiology
- Abstract
Despite the clinical impact of motor symptoms such as agitation or retardation on the course of depression, these symptoms are poorly understood. Novel developments in the field of instrumentation and mobile devices allow for dimensional and continuous recording of motor behavior in various settings, particularly outside the laboratory. Likewise, the use of novel assessments enables to combine multimodal neuroimaging with behavioral measures in order to investigate the neural correlates of motor dysfunction in depression. The research domain criteria (RDoC) framework will soon include a motor domain that will provide a framework for studying motor dysfunction in mood disorders. In addition, new studies within this framework will allow investigators to study motor symptoms across different stages of depression as well as other psychiatric diagnoses. Finally, the introduction of the RDoC motor domain will help test how motor symptoms integrate with the original five RDoC domains (negative valence, positive valence, cognitive, social processes, and arousal/regulation).
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Intraosseous hibernoma: a case report and review of the literature.
- Author
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Hafeez I, Shankman S, Michnovicz J, and Vigorita VJ
- Subjects
- Adipose Tissue, Brown diagnostic imaging, Adipose Tissue, Brown pathology, Adipose Tissue, Brown surgery, Aged, Female, Humans, Radiography, Lipoma, Lumbosacral Region diagnostic imaging, Lumbosacral Region pathology, Lumbosacral Region surgery, Spinal Neoplasms
- Abstract
Study Design: A case report and a literature review are presented., Objective: To describe and review the clinical presentation and characteristic imaging and pathology findings of intraosseous hibernoma., Summary of Background Data: Hibernomas are lesions of brown fat. Brown fat is typically found in newborn mammals and is rich in mitochondria, thus enabling its role in thermoregulation. It represents a small proportion of adult fat and is distinct from the more common "white fat." Rarely does a hibernoma occur within bone. To the authors' knowledge, 5 cases in all have been reported in the literature., Methods: We report the first case to our knowledge of an intraosseous hibernoma occurring within the lumbar spine as well as a review of the literature., Results: Characteristic findings from magnetic resonance studies include variable T1W signal relative to skeletal muscle and hyperintense signal on fluid-sensitive imaging. Computed tomography has consistently demonstrated a sclerotic lesion with variable definition. Pathologic findings include sheets of multivacuolated cells with centrally placed nuclei and numerous tiny surrounding cytoplasmic vacuoles overlying bony trabeculae., Conclusion: Our review of the literature demonstrates that intraosseous hibernoma is most likely an incidental finding with a predilection for the lower extremities in middle-aged females., Level of Evidence: 4.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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